Unit 2 PPT 2 - 9952840
Unit 2 PPT 2 - 9952840
Cognition PPT
2
In this
Unit…
✗ 2.8 Intelligence and Achievement (ppt 1)
✗ 2.3, 2.4, 2.5, 2.6 Memory (ppt 2)
✗ 2.2 Thinking, Problem Solving, Judgement, Decision
making (ppt 2)
3
What roles do
memory and thinking
play in our behaviors?
4
Memory
The persistence of
learning over time
through the storage and
retrieval of information.
https://www.youtube.com
/watch?v=5E90ZAyYmDU
Biological Bases for Memory
Hippocampus
✗ Formation and processing of
explicit memory
Frontal Lobes
✗ Working memory
Basal Ganglia
✗ Procedural memory
Amygdala
✗ Emotion and memory
•LTP- Long Term Potentiation- a lasting Cerebellum
strengthening of synapses that increase ✗ Implicit memory
neurotransmissions of memory
6
Forgetting as encoding failure
• Info never encoded into LTM (Long Term Memory)
• Retrograde Amnesia- forget events before injury
occurred
• Anterograde Amnesia- cannot create new memories
Short-term X
Encoding Long-term
memory memory
Encoding failure
leads to forgetting
Why? Info is unimportant, unnecessary,
decrease in brain's ability to encode
Cognitive Processing
Effortful Processing Automatic Processing
• Encoding that requires • The brain's ability to
attention and conscious handle several stimuli at
effort one
• Ebbinghaus found
that the more times
he practiced a list
of nonsense
syllables on day 1,
the fewer
repetitions he
required to relearn
it on day 2.
• The more time we
rehearse new
information, the
more we retain.
Decay Theories
• Memories Decay- 10
memories will 0%
Average
fade if not percentage of
information
rehearsed over retained
time
• Time plays critical
role
• Ability to retrieve
info declines with
20 1 8 24 2 6 31
time after original mins hr hrs hrs days days days
encoding Interval between original learning of
nonsense syllables and memory test
Which is the real penny?
UCLA Apple Logo Experiment
85 participants
1 drew it correctly
Memory Researchers
•Elizabeth Loftus
•Misinformation Effect- Incorporating
misleading information into one’s memory of
an event
• Example- Could have damaging effect on
eyewitness testimony
•Source Amnesia- inability to remember
the source of the information.
smashed 41 m.p.h.
collided 39 m.p.h.
bumped 38 m.p.h.
hit 34 m.p.h.
contacted 32 m.p.h.
Memory Reconstruction
•Scripts—type of •Schema
schema • Basic ideas and preconceptions
• Mental organization of about people, objects, and
events in time events based on past experience
in LTM
• Example of a
classroom script: • Explains interference especially
Come into class, sit when the information learned is
down, talk to friends, inconsistent with a previously
bell rings, instructor learned schema
begins to speak, take
notes, bell rings again,
leave class, etc.
Ex) What’s your schema for a dog?
You Be the Eyewitness
• Imagine you are at a gas station buying milk
45
The Memory Process
Information Processing
Model….
estimate the
probability of certain
events in terms of
how readily they
come to mind
• Vivid examples in the The Bronx, NY
news often cause an
availability heuristic.
Mental set
Functional Fixedness
The inability to see a new use for an object because we are
fixated on its intended use
Confirmation Bias
FBI reports increase in homicides, violent
crimes by Washington Post
• A tendency to search
for and use VS.